Activation and repression of transcription by auxin-response factors

  1. Tim Ulmasov*,
  2. Gretchen Hagen, and
  3. Tom J. Guilfoyle
  1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Missouri, 117 Schweitzer Hall, Columbia, MO 65211
  1. Communicated by Bernard O. Phinney, University of California, Los Angeles, CA (received for review January 11, 1999)

Abstract

Auxin-response factors (ARFs) bind with specificity to TGTCTC auxin-response elements (AuxREs), which are found in promoters of primary/early auxin-response genes. Nine different ARFs have been analyzed for their capacity to activate or repress transcription in transient expression assays employing auxin-responsive GUS reporter genes. One ARF appears to act as a repressor. Four ARFs function as activators and contain glutamine-rich activation domains. To achieve transcriptional activation on TGTCTC AuxREs in transient expression assays, ARFs require a conserved dimerization domain found in both ARF and Aux/IAA proteins, but they do not absolutely require their DNA-binding domains. Our results suggest that ARFs can activate or repress transcription by binding to AuxREs directly and that selected ARFs, when overexpressed, may potentiate activation further by associating with an endogenous transcription factor(s) (e.g., an ARF) that is bound to AuxREs. Transfection experiments suggest that TGTCTC AuxREs are occupied regardless of the auxin status in cells and that these occupied AuxREs are activated when exogenous auxin is applied to cells or when ARF activators are overexpressed. The results provide new insight into mechanisms involved with auxin regulation of primary/early-response genes.

Footnotes

  • * Present address: Monsanto, Mail Zone U3E, 800 North Lindberg Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63167.

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: GuilfoyleT{at}missouri.edu.

  • Data deposition: The sequences reported in this paper have been deposited in the GenBank database (accession nos. AF013466, AF013467, AF042195, AF042196, and AF082176).

  • ABBREVIATIONS:
    AuxRE,
    auxin-response element;
    ARF,
    auxin-response factor;
    DBD,
    DNA-binding domain;
    CTD,
    carboxyl-terminal domain;
    CaMV,
    cauliflower mosaic virus;
    MR,
    middle region between the DBD and CTD;
    AD,
    activation domain
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